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  • I'm not a UBI guy.

  • Not now.

  • And the reason is basically, it's a lot of money.

  • And given that there are constraints, political constraints on how

  • much money we're going to be able to get together for social

  • programs. Trouble with UBI is that either it's going to cost an

  • amount that's beyond what I expect is to be politically possible

  • and in the next several decades. Or it's going to be way inadequate.

  • And so more targeted programs, programs that that focus on people with

  • real needs and that includes everything from of course universal

  • health care, which we can should do right away one way or another, to

  • various kinds of income supports for families with children and so

  • on. There's a whole lot.

  • If you ask what we can do with a sum substantially less than

  • UBI would cost, it's a lot.

  • And to say well no we must have UBI.

  • That would only make sense if we were right on the verge of the point

  • where the robots take all of our jobs and that doesn't look, there's

  • no sign that that's actually happening.

  • A starting point is finish the job that the, that the Affordable Care Act began.

  • Now, I would I'm, I'm very enthusiastic about this new proposal to ACA 2.0 to reinforce it.

  • That's not the that's not the end point.

  • I mean, I'm a I'm a Medicare for America guy which is Medicare is

  • available to everyone but you can also keep private insurance but

  • something like that.

  • But start with that.

  • We need aid to families, we need child care.

  • Universal child care is it's something that it's crazy not to have

  • given what it means for the country's future.

  • There's a there's a list of things you start to add up things that

  • are huge benefits to America that would cost a few percent to GDP.

  • And that's a significant but not crushing sum and we should just do

  • them.

  • You could have a very extensive progressive agenda for no more than

  • the amount of money that a Republican Congress just blew out a

  • completely pointless tax cut.

  • Right now two trillion dollars over the next 10 years would buy you a

  • lot of social progress.

  • So, let's start from there.

  • Anything up to that point, I would say let's not even worry about

  • where the money is coming from.

  • If we're going to have a recession, it's gonna be a smorgasbord

  • recession. It's going to be no one thing but just a bunch of different things.

  • I mean short run economic forecasting is a is a black art.

  • Nobody does it very well.

  • For what it's worth.

  • People who are tracking are feeling moderately depressed right now.

  • They're seeing slow growth right now and the markets, the bond market

  • is acting as if there's a pretty good chance of a recession sometime

  • in the next year or so but who knows.

  • There are all kinds of things that could be going wrong.

  • China is clearly struggling.

  • Europe may very well actually already be in recession. They probably

  • are suffering the deflation of the tech bubble, corporate debt has

  • gotten it. I've been saying there's no one thing this is if we're

  • going to have a recession it's going to be a smorgasbord recession.

  • It said now that our economy is the strongest it's ever been in the

  • history of our country.

  • Well even even his own numbers, right?

  • I mean it's not.

  • He's been boasting about the greatest economy ever and it's actually

  • turns out that we've had the highest growth rate since 2015.

  • Right? It's not it's not exceptional.

  • What we've been seeing is just kind of in the normal range of

  • fluctuations.

  • People don't live on GDP.

  • People live on their paychecks and paychecks have not at

  • best kept slightly ahead of inflation and not even that.

  • And that's for a long time.

  • People... So, you say whatever, whatever people may say about the

  • growth number, the fact that the matter is people are looking and

  • saying I don't feel like it's any easier to pay my bills this year

  • than it was last year.

  • The absence of faster wage growth despite low unemployment is

  • something of a mystery.

  • But you know the economy is always changing.

  • The way we measure the unemployment rate is always the same but what it means

  • in terms of how tight our labor markets, how much bargaining power workers have.

  • That can change a lot depending on what the economy is like and it

  • looks as if we have an economy right now where between

  • and maybe factors we just don't understand, what looks like a historically low

  • unemployment rate isn't actually translating into the kind of

  • bargaining power that workers used to have.

  • I actually think that the answer to what will replace unions is

  • unions.

  • In the end, something like organized you know if union means organized

  • labor that is able to bargain collectively, there's a reason that we

  • hit upon that solution and it's a solution that we managed to lose a lot of.

  • Largely because of a political environment that's hostile.

  • I mean we...unions are a very small factor in the U.S. economy right now.

  • But you know there's two thirds of the workforce in Scandinavia.

  • So there's nothing about the 21st century that says that you can't have extensive unionization.

  • America has made policy choices that have led to low unionization.

  • Policy choices can change.

  • Denmark is absolutely as exposed to the winds of global competition as America is.

  • Two thirds of them are in unions.

  • And remember also most of our economy by the way is services which

  • are not traded at all.

  • So no this is, this is an excuse. We made we made the decision

  • not to have unions in America.

  • We didn't lose them because they became obsolete.

  • The whole question of income inequality and growth is a very tortured

  • one. It's not one with a simple or clear answer.

  • Income inequality at the bottom means that a lot of children don't

  • get the essential nutrition, health care or other support that they

  • need to realize their potential.

  • So that's a drag on growth.

  • There is some very ambiguous evidence about whether high income

  • inequality is that hurts consumer demand.

  • I'm not fully convinced of it myself.

  • So I think the reason to be worried about income inequality is not what it does to GDP.

  • The reason to be worried about income inequality is what it does to

  • people, which is ultimately what we care about.

  • We have what amounts to controlled experiments.

  • We know what happened when food stamps were brought in.

  • We know what happened when Medicaid was brought in because those were

  • both programs that didn't go into effect all across America at the same time.

  • They rolled out across the country and we can look.

  • We have what amounts to an experiment in what happens to children who

  • did get nutritional aid when they were very small.

  • What happens to children who did get adequate medical care compared

  • with those who did not.

  • And 20, 30 years later, they are more productive, they are healthier

  • more productive, more successful citizens of our society.

  • So there's no question that alleviating hardship at the bottom is

  • good not just for the individual but for, for the broader society and for the economy.

  • So we now have a large part of the influential elite in the United

  • States that has simply opted out of public schooling.

  • That has to be really bad for social cohesion.

  • And so those are the sorts of things I think that you really want to

  • worry about on inequality.

  • Beyond just adequacy of material standard of living.

  • Are we a society or are we not?

  • And increasingly here we are not.

  • Look, if we take the extreme.

  • The Cuba at the height of Castro's

  • regime, where your income was the same regardless of what you did.

  • You can't be a card carrying economist and not believe that that has

  • some adverse incentive effects.

  • But the notion that we are that, this is a prime concern in

  • America right now, it's just not supported by the evidence.

  • And look I would say when we talk about tax rates it turns out that

  • if you are a person who lives in New York City and earns your income

  • through wages and salary but you have a high salary.

  • So you're a highly paid New York person.

  • You probably pay 55 to 60 cents of each additional dollar you make

  • in extra taxes.

  • So we have a pretty high, not as high as Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

  • wants it to go.

  • Or Peter Diamond, the great economist thinks it should go.

  • But we have a pretty high marginal tax rate in New York.

  • Does the city out here look to you like a place where people you know

  • just don't really work very hard because taxes are too high?

  • It doesn't strike me that way.

  • So I think we have a pretty good pretty good evidence that the

  • incentive effects in America right now are not something to be

  • worried about.

  • I think it's one of those any anything to prescribe any

  • kind of progressive in some sense social policy they'll find a way to

  • make it sound like an ugly thing and I think that I think the reason

  • that redistribution.

  • managed to acquire a bad resonance among some people is that they've

  • managed to convince basically convince white people that taking your

  • money away and giving it to people with darker skins.

  • That's really what life that's like a lot of things in America.

  • But that's not certainly not what experts think that redistribution

  • is collecting money in taxes and using it to finance various kinds of

  • social programs that tend to help people who are more in need.

  • Child care, early development crucially.

  • That's crucial both for the children and for the parents because we

  • live in a society where in fact

  • lots of people...

  • lots of families require two working parents or you have single parents who must work.

  • And I'm not violently opposed to you know baby bond things where you

  • give people assets but the fact of the matter is we are going to be

  • as a society in which people the great majority of people make a

  • living by work, by selling their labor.

  • And so trying to spread asset ownership can help maybe a little bit

  • but ultimately if you want if you want America to be a more equal or

  • more middle class society you have to be increasing the rewards to

  • work not giving people assets.

  • That is a genuinely hard problem.

  • I spoke about that.

  • I've wrote about that.

  • I mean there are there are things I know.

  • I think we know a lot about how to make inequality less.

  • We know a lot about how to make children's lives better and make

  • their make them more productive adults.

  • If you ask me what you can do, I spent my early years in Utica, New

  • York. I got in trouble with the mayor of Utica by saying some of

  • this. But if you ask what can we do to actually make lots of people.

  • It's a decaying industrial city.

  • One make lots of people want to move back to places like Utica.

  • I don't know how you do that.

  • There are you can try.

  • But the historical record of attempts at, attempts to revive

  • depressed regions as opposed to helping the people in those regions

  • which we do a lot of but actually reviving them is not great.

  • So there are going to be there are going gonna be parts of America

  • that where it made sense to locate a lot of stuff.

  • Given the economy we had in 1890 and there is not a lot of reason to

  • do that in the year 2020.

  • And if people are determined enough to try and stay then we should

  • give them every opportunity that things like broadband should be

  • available everywhere.

  • The fact that there are broadband deserts in a lot of America is

  • that's unnecessary and unforgivable.

  • So I'm not giving advice to people but we should make housing

  • affordable. You have an economic dynamo like the city of New York.

  • It shouldn't be a place where only people at the 98 percentile can

  • afford to actually have a place to live.

I'm not a UBI guy.

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何が次の不況を引き起こすのか - UBIとその他についてのポール・クルーグマン (What Will Cause The Next Recession - Paul Krugman On UBI And More)

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    王惟惟 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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